Read The Selected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai Online
Authors: Chana Bloch and Stephen Mitchell
The house I lived in gets farther and farther away
but a light was left burning in the window
so that people would only see and not hear.
This is the end.
And how to start loving again is like the problem
of architects in an old city: how to build
where houses once stood, so it will look like
those days, yet also like now.
23
Nineteen years this city was divided—
the lifetime of a young man who might have fallen in the war.
I long for the serenity and for the old longing.
Crazy people would cross through the fence that divided it,
enemies breached it,
lovers went up to it, testing,
like circus acrobats who try out the net
before they dare to jump.
The patches of no-man’s-land were like placid bays.
Longing floated overhead in the sky
like ships whose anchors stuck deep in us, and sweetly
ached.
27
The toys of an only God
who is rich and spoiled:
dolls, angels, marbles, a bell and glass,
golden wheels, bundles of flutes.
But the toys of the poor children
of a poor God: prayer rattles, dry
palm branches, matzohs.
And at the very most,
a Havdoleh box for cheap spices
with a little flag on top that goes round and round.
29
People travel a long distance to be able to say: This reminds me
of some other place.
It’s like that time, it’s similar.
But
I knew a man who traveled all the way to New York
to commit suicide.
He claimed that the buildings in Jerusalem
were too low and besides, everyone knew him here.
I remember him fondly because once
he called me out of the classroom in the middle of a lesson:
“A beautiful woman is waiting for you outside, in the garden.”
And he quieted the noisy children.
Whenever I think about the woman and the garden,
I remember him up on that high roof:
the loneliness of his death, the death of his loneliness.
31
Four synagogues are entrenched together
against bombardments from God.
In the first, Holy Arks with candies hidden away,
and sweet preserves of God’s Word from a blessed season,
all in beautiful jars, for children
to stand on tiptoe and lick with a golden finger.
Also ovens with
cholent
and oatmeal running over.
In the second, four strong pillars for an everlasting
wedding canopy.
The result
of love.
The third, an old Turkish bathhouse with small, high windows
and Torah scrolls, naked
or taking off their robes.
Answer, answer us
in clouds of vapor and white steam,
Answer, answer
till the senses swoon.
The fourth:
part of God’s bequest.
Yes.
These are thy tents, O Jacob,
in profundis.
“From here we begin the descent.
Please remain seated
till the signal lights up.”
As on a flight
that will never land.
32
In the lot through which lovers took a short-cut
the Rumanian circus is parked.
Clouds mill around the setting sun like refugees
in a strange city of refuge.
A man of the twentieth century
casts a dark purple Byzantine shadow.
A woman shades her eyes with a raised hand, ringing
a bunch of lifted grapes.
Pain found me in the street
and whistled to his companions: Here’s another one.
New houses flooded my father’s grave
like tank columns.
It stayed proud and didn’t surrender.
A man who has no portion in the world to come
sleeps with a woman who does.
Their lust is reinforced by the self-restraint
in the monasteries all around.
This house has love carved on its gate
and loneliness for supports.
“From the roof you can see” or “Next year”—
between these two a whole life goes on.
In this city, the water level
is always beneath the level of the dead.
34
Let the memorial hill remember instead of me,
that’s what it’s here for.
Let the park in-memory-of remember,
let the street that’s-named-for remember,
let the famous building remember,
let the synagogue that’s named after God remember,
let the rolling Torah scroll remember, let the prayer
for the memory of the dead remember.
Let the flags remember,
those multicolored shrouds of history: the bodies they wrapped
have long since turned to dust.
Let the dust remember.
Let the dung remember at the gate.
Let the afterbirth remember.
Let the beasts of the field and the birds of the heavens
eat and remember.
Let all of them remember so that I can rest.
35
In the summer whole peoples visit one another
to spy out each other’s nakedness.
Hebrew and Arabic, that are like guttural
stones, like sand on the palate,
grow soft as oil for the tourists’ sake.
Jihad and Jehovah’s wars
burst like ripe figs.
Jerusalem’s water pipes protrude
like the veins and sinews of a tired old man.
Its houses are like the teeth of a lower jaw,
grinding in vain
because the skies above it are empty.
Perhaps Jerusalem is a dead city
with people
swarming like maggots.
Sometimes they celebrate.
36
Every evening God takes his glittery merchandise
out of the shop window:
chariot works, tablets of law, fancy beads,
crosses and gleaming bells,
and puts them back into dark boxes
inside, and closes the shutter: “Another day,
and still not one prophet has come to buy.”
37
All these stones, all this sorrow, all this
light, rubble of night hours and noon-dust,
all the twisted pipework of sanctity,
Wailing Wall, towers, rusty halos,
all the prophecies that—like old men—couldn’t hold it in,
all the sweaty angels’ wings,
all the stinking candles, all the prosthetic tourism,
dung of deliverance, bliss-and-balls,
dregs of nothingness, bomb and time.
All this dust, all these bones
in the process of resurrection and of the wind,
all this love, all these
stones, all this sorrow—
Go heap them into the valleys all around
so Jerusalem will be level
for my sweet airplane
that will come and carry me up.
Songs of Continuity
Songs of continuity, land mines and graves:
that’s what turns up when you’re making a house or a road.
Then come the black crow people from Meah She’arim
with their bitter screeching: “A body!
A dead body!”
Then the young soldiers with their hands
of the night before,
dismantling iron to decipher death.
So come on, let’s not build a house, let’s not pave a road!
Let’s make a house that’s folded inside the heart,
a road wound up on a spool in the soul, deep inside,
and we won’t die, ever.
People here live inside prophecies that have come true
as inside a heavy cloud that didn’t disperse
after an explosion.
And so in their lonely blindness they touch one another
between the legs, between day and night,
because they have no other time and they
have no other place, and the prophets
died a long time ago.
At the Monastery of Latroun
At the monastery of Latroun, waiting for the wine
to be wrapped for me inside the cool building,
all the laziness of this land came over me:
Holy, Holy, Holy.
I was lying on my back in the dry grass
watching the summer clouds high up in the sky,
motionless, like me down here.
Rain in another country, peace in my heart.
And white seeds will fly from my penis
as from a dandelion.
Come on, now:
Poof, poof.
When I Was Young, the Whole Country Was Young
When I was young, the whole country was young.
And my father
was everyone’s father.
When I was happy, the country
was happy too, and when I jumped on her, she jumped
under me.
The grass that covered her in spring
softened me too, and the dry earth of summer hurt me
like my own cracked footsoles.
When I first fell in love, they proclaimed
her independence, and when my hair
fluttered in the breeze, so did her flags.
When I fought in the war, she fought, when I got up
she got up too, and when I sank
she began to sink with me.
Now I’m beginning to come apart from all that:
like something that’s glued, after the glue dries out,
I’m getting detached and curling into myself.
The other day I saw a clarinet player in the Police Band
that was playing at David’s Citadel.
His hair was white and his face calm: a face
of 1946, the one and only year
between famous and terrible years
when nothing happened except for a great hope and his music
and my loving a girl in a quiet room in Jerusalem.
I hadn’t seen him since then, but the hope for a better world
never left his face.
Afterward I bought myself some non-kosher salami
and two bagels, and I walked home.
I managed to hear the evening news
and ate and lay down on the bed
and the memory of my first love came back to me
like the sensation of falling
just before sleep.
I Walked Past a House Where I Lived Once
I walked past a house where I lived once:
a man and a woman are still together in the whispers there.
Many years have passed with the quiet hum
of the staircase bulb going on
and off and on again.
The keyholes are like little wounds
where all the blood seeped out.
And inside,
people pale as death.
I want to stand once again as I did
holding my first love all night long in the doorway.
When we left at dawn, the house
began to fall apart and since then the city and since then
the whole world.
I want to be filled with longing again
till dark burn marks show on my skin.
I want to be written again
in the Book of Life, to be written every single day
till the writing hand hurts.
To My Love, Combing Her Hair
To my love, combing her hair